Buying a Sail
It was not so many years ago that buying a new sail for your boat meant a pleasant trip down to your local sailmaker. You made a call (email was not yet invented), set up an appointment and then spent a few wonderful hours looking at bolts of cloth, talking boats and settling on a price. If you were a good customer a handshake would seal the deal, the sail would be made, and a few weeks later it was delivered to your boat and an invoice would arrive by mail. Your sailmaker knew you by name—both yours and your boat’s—just as your family doctor knew your medical history. More often than not the sailmaker would bend the sail on personally, take the boat out for a sail to check the fit and cut of your new purchase, and generally treat you like, well, a customer.
Those days, however, are long gone. We live in a much more technically advanced world where even important purchases like a new sail are done via e-mail, phone, the web or some other “convenient” means. Old-fashioned service is gone, unless of course you are spending upward of fifty thousand dollars, and that’s not necessarily a bad thing, since then, as now, that service doesn’t come cheap.
True, you want the sail to fit right, look good and perform well, but you also want all these things at a reasonable price. For a sailmaker, spending the afternoon out sailing with a customer, while a pleasant experience for both parties,
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